KIRKUS REVIEW

When Valerie’s elderly aunt
Charlotte goes missing, she must step in to take care of business at the old
Ringelnatz & Co. bookstore.

Valerie’s life was on an orderly
course until her aunt disappeared, leaving a note that simply said her niece
was to manage affairs in her absence. The young woman had been attending
business school and enjoyed decent-enough companionship with her boyfriend.
When she arrives at Ringelnatz, the shop is a mess. Books are arranged
haphazardly, and the accounting system’s nonexistent. There’s also a pregnant
rat which oddly doesn’t seem to bother Valerie in the least. In time, she
considers the rodent a dear friend, feeding and caring for it like a modern-day
Disney princess. In his debut novel, German literary agent Montasser pens a
love letter to literature in the form of this story of a bookseller with a
magical ability to prescribe just the right book for each of her customers. And
one mysterious book—which Valerie initially presumes is defective because of
its missing pages—causes the young woman to question what is and is not
possible both on and off the page. Through her interactions with customers and
letters from satisfied readers, Valerie begins to see the charm amid chaos at
Ringelnatz, thus challenging her to reflect on her own life. In a story set in
a bookstore, references to authors and literature are to be expected, and this
is no exception. But the name-dropping adds little, if anything, to the story.
This anemic novel, translated from German, is told by a distant narrator who is
sometimes poetic but more often pretentious.

While attempting to be whimsical and
delightful, this tiny novel feels just a bit too precious and pleased with
itself. In the end, it’s not so special.

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